Affiliation:
1. Colby College
2. University of Hawaii at Manoa
3. Wellesley College
Abstract
This article explores the role that the sex–gender system plays in shaping both the violence and victimization of girls. Taking first the issue of girls' violence, the article argues that steep increases in girls' arrests are not the product of girls becoming more like boys. Instead, forms of girls' minor violence that were once ignored are now being criminalized. Shifting gears, the article explores how “gender-neutral” relabeling of girls' victimization in schools, a site of much violence against girls, is extremely problematic. Renaming “sexual harassment” as “bullying” tends to psychopathologize gender violence while simultaneously stripping girl victims of powerful legal rights and remedies. To illustrate this latter point, a “model” antibullying program, The Bullying Prevention Program, is reviewed. Offering a one-size-fits-all view of bullying, it assumes all bullying can be approached psychologically or relationally, thereby minimizing the structural underpinnings of such behavior.
Subject
Law,Sociology and Political Science,Gender Studies
Reference114 articles.
1. Fighting to Be Somebody: Resisting Erasure and the Discursive Practices of Female Adolescent..
2. Ahmad, Y. & Smith, P.K. (1994). Bullying in schools and the issue of sex differences . In J. Archer (Ed.), Male violence (pp. 70-83). New York: Routledge .
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